Gottlieb Friedrich Carl Horn

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Gottlieb Friedrich Carl Horn (born October 24, 1772 in Braunschweig ; † June 11, 1844 in Bremen ) was a lawyer and Bremen senator .

biography

Horn was the son of the architect and chief paymaster Ernst Wilhelm Horn (1732–1812) and his wife Sophie Dorothea (1737–1787). His uncles were the doctor and psychiatrist Ernst Horn and the writer Franz Horn .

He was married to Anna Sophie Schultze (1786–1844) from Bremen.

Horn completed his school days in Braunschweig, from 1789 at the Collegium Carolinum and from 1791 studied law at the University of Helmstedt , from 1793 at the University of Jena and 1795 at the Academy in Braunschweig, and he obtained his doctorate in 1801 in Helmstedt. jur.

From 1796 he worked as a lawyer and secretary at the criminal court in Braunschweig. In 1796/97 he was secretary of the Prussian director's envoy Christian Konrad Wilhelm von Dohm at the Hildesheim district council and in 1797/99 at the Rastatt Congress . As an envoy, von Dohm also represented Bremen and its independence and became Bremen's first honorary citizen in 1797 . Horn therefore became known in Bremen.

From 1801 Horn was the second procurator fisci (title for employees in property or state administration) in Bremen. From 1802 to 1844 (†) he was the successor of now mayor Liborius Diederich Post Bremen Senator. He was u. a. as a scholarch responsible for the school system. In 1818 he issued general instructions for the editorial management of the Bremer Zeitung on the basis of a complaint from an article by August Bercht , who therefore lost his job as an editor in Bremen in 1819.

During the French era in Bremen , he was a judge at the Hamburg High Court from 1811 to 1813 . In 1820 he had the now listed residential building at Kolpingstrasse 9 built in the Bremen-Mitte district in the Schnoorviertel .

See also

literature

  • Nicola Wurthmann: Senators, friends and families. Rule structures and self-image of the Bremen elite between tradition and modernity (1813–1848) . Self-published by the Bremen State Archives, Bremen 2009, ISBN 978-3-925729-55-3 , ( publications from the State Archives of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen 69), (also: Hamburg, Univ., Diss., 2007).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich von Gentz : Against the Bremer Zeitung . In: Der Oesterreichische Beobachter , No. 154 of June 3, 1818, pp. 834–838.
  2. Heinrich Tidemann: The censorship in Bremen from its beginnings to the Karlsbader resolutions in 1819 . In: Bremisches Jahrbuch Reihe A, 30 (1926), pp. 311–394, especially p. 378.